An informative baseball blog for fans with a true love of the game. Posts include stats, profiles, anecdotes and historical game accounts. All eras are covered from the deadball years to the present day.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

The Sad Tale of Andrew "Rube" Foster

The best writers in Hollywood could
not have crafted a better script than the true life story of Andrew “Rube”
Foster. A barrel-chested giant with a devastating screwball, the sly
right-hander kept batters at a severe disadvantage for nearly two decades. With
an 18-strikeout performance and a 51-win season under his belt, he gained
control of the Leland Giants in 1909, molding them into one of the most successful
franchises in the history of black baseball. His power and influence reached
a zenith in 1919, when he founded the Negro National League. Within four years,
the circuit had developed a fan base in the millions.

A domineering presence in
the dugout, Foster once hit a player over the head with his meerschaum pipe for
tripling with a bunt sign on. In the boardroom, he was equally despotic. Dayton
Marcos’ owner John Mathews made the mistake of falling asleep during a league
meeting. He reportedly awoke to find that Foster had split up his team and
divided the spoils amongst other owners.

Keeping the league afloat was a
colossal undertaking—especially with the establishment of the rival Eastern
Colored League. In 1924, Foster wrote that the pressure was “almost beyond
endurance.” By 1926, the cracks were beginning to show. Two weeks before
Christmas that year, the troubled executive had a manic outburst in his Chicago
apartment. His wife phoned the police and, after a violent struggle, he was
taken into custody. Declared incompetent, he was committed to a mental
facility. Infielder Dave Malarcher assumed managerial responsibilities in
Foster’s absence, leading the Giants to a Negro National League championship.
Sadly, Foster was in no state of mind to savor news of the victory. He suffered
from various delusions, among them the notion that he had been selected to
throw out the first pitch at the major league World Series. He remained
institutionalized until his death in 1930. He was just fifty-one years old.